Walking through the show floor at Computex 2026, it’s pretty clear that Hall Effect keyboards are no longer niche. Everyone’s doing it. But at the CORSAIR suite at Grand Hyatt Hotel, the CLIPPER PRO MINI 60 stood out not because it’s new to the category, but because of how they’re tightening the formula.

At first glance, it’s just a clean 60% board. Small footprint, lightweight, easy to throw into any setup. For FPS and battle royale players, that instantly makes sense. More mouse space, less clutter, nothing getting in the way. It feels like it was built around actual use cases, not just aesthetics.

Underneath, you’re getting the new MGX Hyperdrive Core magnetic switches paired with AXON 8K polling. On paper, that’s about speed and consistency, but in practice, it’s about inputs feeling immediate and predictable when things get chaotic in ranked matches.

What really defines this board is the Hall Effect customization. Rapid Trigger, Multi-Action, Smart Tap, and Tap Lock are all here. None of these are new ideas, especially with brands like Wooting and Keychron already pushing similar features. The difference is CORSAIR is trying to consolidate everything into one cohesive system that’s easier to dial in.

And it shows in how flexible the inputs can get. You can fine-tune actuation, layer commands, and adjust how keys respond depending on the game you’re playing. Whether it’s quick resets in tactical shooters or tighter movement control in faster titles, the keyboard adapts more than it dictates.

There’s also FlashTap SOCD handling conflicting inputs in the background. It’s one of those things you don’t notice until you need it, but in competitive play, it matters.

Build-wise, they kept it straightforward. It’s compact, durable, and rated IP57 for dust and spill resistance. The focus here isn’t on looking premium, it’s on keeping the board reliable, portable, and ready for daily abuse without unnecessary bulk.

What this really feels like is CORSAIR recognizing where the market is heading. Hall Effect is already established. The move now is refinement, not reinvention. Take what works, tighten it, and deliver it in a form factor that actually benefits competitive players.



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